Global visibility for global health: Is it time for a new descriptor in Medical Subject Heading (MeSH) of MEDLINE/PubMed?

A PubMed search using the term “global health” [All Fields] retrieves 8975 articles published up to the end of 2012. This is a large body of evidence for a new discipline in health research, defined in 2009 as an “area of study, research, and practice that places a priority on improving health and achieving equity in health for all people worldwide. Global health emphasizes transnational health issues, determinants, and solutions; involves many disciplines within and beyond the health sciences and promotes interdisciplinary collaboration; and is a synthesis of population–based prevention with individual–level clinical care” [1].


PubMEd hISTOry Of glObal hEalTh
According to PubMed, the first article that mentions global health was published already in 1966, describing "global health factors of importance" to military forces with worldwide engagement [2]. The term "global health" was again used 10 years later, in 1976, in an article that recognized blindness and its prevention as a global health problem; the article was published in a Swedish general medical journal [3]. From 1979, there is a steady flow of articles Global visibility for global health:

Is it time for a new descriptor in Medical Subject Heading (MeSH) of MEDLINE/ PubMed?
Ana Marušić related to global health, with a major increase from 2006 onwards (Figure 1), paralleled by a dramatic increase in academic involvement in global health training programmes [4]. In 2010 and 2011, the number of articles containing the term "global health" went over a thousand, and then almost doubled in 2012, the year which closed with 2136 articles (Figure 1). At the time of finishing this viewpoint (search performed on 29 May 2013), the number of articles in less than the first 5 months of 2013 was 1165, indicating a continuing rapid growth of global health research.

glObal hEalTh aS a bIblIOgraPhIcal cONcEPT
Despite such volume of research output in global health, the term "global health" is not included in the Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) of the NLM -its controlled vocabulary thesaurus which NLM uses to index articles in MED-LINE [5]. NLM states that its indexers include new terms in MeSH "as they appear in the scientific literature or in emerging areas of research". Search of MeSH for the truncated term "global" returns 52 terms, mostly related to pro-despite a large body of research in global health (almost 9000 articles published in PubMed until 2012), the term "global health" is not included in the Medical Subject headings (MeSh) of the NlM -its controlled vocabulary thesaurus which NlM uses to index articles in MEdlINE. There are only 6 journals currently covered by PubMed which specialize in global health, including Journal of global health.
tein biochemistry. Only 7 terms have some relevance to global health, such as "Global Warming" (introduced in 2010), "Disease Eradication" (introduced in 2012), "Carbon Footprint" (introduced in 2011), "World War I" and "World War II" (introduced in 2005), "Greenhouse Effect" (introduced in 1994) and "Transcultural Nursing" (introduced in 1992). It is interesting that "Global Warming" is a MeSH term although the number of articles using this term is almost 3 times smaller than that for "global health". PubMed search for "global warming" ("global warming"[All Fields]) retrieves 3054 articles until the end of 2012, with the highest annual output of 504 articles in 2012.
The only term related to global health in MeSH is "World Health", introduced in 1978 and defined as "The concept pertaining to the health status of inhabitants of the world". This term does not adequately cover the current concept of global health [1], just as the term "burden of disease" is not adequately covered by the concept "Cost of Illness" ("The personal cost of acute or chronic disease") where it maps in a MeSH search.

JOurNal Of glObal hEalTh (Jogh) -PrESENT aNd fuTurE
Yes, one of 6 journals in PubMed dedicated to global health is Journal of Global Health (JoGH), the journal we started 2 years ago for reason described above -the need to communicate rapidly accumulating research on health issues with global impact [7]. Two years later, the data on journal visibility fully justify its launch. Particularly important was the inclusion of the journal in PubMed Central, NLM' s digital journal repository [6], which also made all journal issues available in PubMed. PubMed coverage increased access to articles both via PubMedCentral and the journal site.
According to Google Analytics© breakdown of JoGH website traffic 12 months before (1 December 2011 to 30 November 2012) and 6 months after PubMed coverage (1 December 2012 to 31 May 2013), direct visits to journal's website (http://jogh.org) increased from about 10 to 17 visitors per day, with a substantial growth in the category of "new visitors" (58.7% vs 71.2% before and after PubMed coverage, respectively). Daily maximum increased from 35 to 48 visits, and daily minimum from 1 to 4 visits. PubMed I propose the inclusion of "global health" as a MeSh term in order to recognize the new research discipline in health. This will greatly assist in finding relevant evidence about global health issues and facilitate the translation of knowledge to practice at all levels of health care.  coverage also facilitated a truly global access to the journal's website. In total (18 months between Dec 2011 and May 2012, the website has been visited 6805 times, attracting visitors from 1233 cities in 128 countries (Source: Google Analytics©). The largest number of visits (n = 1978) was from United Kingdom, closely followed by the USA (n = 1669) (Figure 2).
The usage through PubMed directly is even more impressive (Figure 3). In the month when JoGH became available in PubMed Central (December 2012), the total number of visits to the journal' s content increased 10-fold, to more than 3500 visits per month in the first 3 months. The visits came from all over the world, and PubMed coverage increased those from developing countries. A total of 18 194 requests for full-text articles were recorded through PubMed Central within the first six months (December 2012 -May 2013).
The top 10 most accessed and downloaded articles during the first six months (December 2012 -May2013) of JoGH's availability via PubMed are shown in Table 1. The authors of these papers come from different countries, both highincome and low-and middle-income countries, and different world regions. The interest of JoGH readers is clear -they want high-quality systematic reviews and viewpoints on those issues that Photo: Courtesy of David Hipgrave, personal collection  are relevant for the global community, followed by regional issues with a global relevance and impact ( Table 1). In future, JoGH will continue its mission of publishing highquality peer-reviewed original research, objective reviews and personal viewpoints of global health and development issues [7]. As a member of the Committee of Publication Ethics (COPE), JoGH will keep follow the best practices in scientific publishing and ensure the integrity of the published record [8].